A CALL TO SPIRITUAL REFORMATION - Blog of Dan



A CALL TO SPIRITUAL REFORMATION

D. A. CARSON

Preface

The aim: to work through several of Paul’s prayers in such a way that we hear God speak to us today, and to find strength and direction to improve our praying, both for God’s glory and for our good. (p. 9-10)

Introduction: The Urgent Need of the Church

The one thing we most urgently need in Western Christendom is a deeper knowledge of God. We need to know God better. (p. 15)

One of the foundation steps in knowing God, and one of the basic demonstrations that we do know God, is prayer – spiritual, persistent, biblically minded prayer. (p. 16)

Robert Murray M’Cheyne declared, “What a man is alone of his knees before God, that he is, and no more”. (p. 16)

J. I. Packer writes, “I believe that prayer is the measure of the man, spiritually, in a way that nothing else is, so that how we pray is as important a question as we can ever face”. (p. 17)

The purpose of this book is to think through some of Paul’s prayers, so that we may align our prayer habits with his. (p. 17-18)

Chapter 1: Lessons from the School of Prayer

Outline

1. Much praying is not done because we do not plan to pray.

2. Adopt practical ways to impede mental drift.

3. At various periods in your life, develop, if possible prayer-partner relationships.

4. Choose models – but choose them well.

5. Develop a system for your prayer lists.

6. Mingle praise, confession, and intercession; but when you intercede, try to tie as many requests as possible to Scripture.

7. If you are in any form of spiritual leadership, work at your public prayers.

8. Pray until you pray.

Helpful Quotes

We must self-consciously set aside time to do nothing but pray. (p. 19)

It was because Jesus’ disciples observed his prayer life that they sought his instructions in prayer (Luke 11:1). (p. 24)

Study their content, their breadth, their passion, their unction – but do not ape their idiom. (p. 27)

Christian prayer is marked decisively by petition, because this form of prayer discloses the true state of affairs. It reminds the believer that God is the source of all good, and that human beings are utterly dependent and stand in need of everything. (p. 31)

The model of a personal relationship with a father is as helpful as any. If a boy asks his father for several things, all within the father’s power to give, the father may give him one of them right away, delay giving him another, decline to give him a third, set up a condition for the fourth. The child is not assured of receiving something because he has used the right incantation: that would be magic. The father may decline to give something because he knows it is not in the child’s best interests. He may delay giving something else because he knows that so many requests from his young son are temporary and whimsical. He may also withhold something that he knows the child needs until the child asks for it in an appropriate way. But above all, the wise father is more interested in a relationship with his son than in merely giving him things. Giving him things constitutes part of that relationship but certainly not all of it. The father and son may enjoy simply going out for walks together. Often the son will talk with his father not to obtain something, or even to find out something, but simply because he likes to be with him. (p. 31)

We ask our heavenly Father for things because he has determined that many blessings will come to us only through prayer. (p. 32)

When we pray our intercessions may be off the mark; on many matters we do not know the Scriptures well enough, we do not know God well enough, to be confident about what we should be praying. But the Holy Spirit helps us by interceding for us with unuttered groanings offered to the Father while we Christians are praying. (p. 33)

Public praying is a pedagogical opportunity. It provides the one who is praying with an opportunity to instruct or encourage or edify all who hear the prayer. (p. 35)

Charles Spurgeon did not mind sharing his pulpit: others sometimes preached in his home church even when he was present. But when he came to the “pastoral prayer”, if he was present he reserved that part of the service for himself. It arose from his love for his people, his high view of prayer, his conviction that public praying should not only intercede with god but also instruct and edify and encourage the saints. (p. 35)

John Chapman puts it this way, “pray as you can and don’t try to pray as you can’t”. (p. 38)

Chapter 2: The Framework of Prayer (2 Thessalonians 1:3-12)

Outline

Two dominant features of this framework for Paul’s prayer:

1. Thankfulness of Signs of Grace

- Paul gives thanks that his readers’ faith is growing.

- Paul gives thanks that their love is increasing.

- Paul gives thanks that they are persevering under trial.

2. Confidence in the Prospect of Vindication

- For believers, there will be vindication.

- For others, there will be retribution.

Helpful Quotes

Verses 3-10 provide us with a framework of thought that Paul keeps in mind as he prays, a framework that largely controls what Paul prays for and why. (p. 39)

By and large, our thanksgiving seems to be tied rather tightly to our material well-being and comfort. (p. 41)

When Christians do grow in their love for each other, for no other reason than because they are loved by Jesus Christ and love him in return, that growing love is an infallible sign of grace in their lives. (p.43)

If in our prayers we are to develop a mental framework analogous to Paul’s, we must look for signs of grace in the lives of Christians, and give God thanks for them. (p.44)

We are losing our anticipation of the Lord’s return, the anticipation that Paul shows is basic to his thought. Even though we do not disavow central truths, for many of us their power has been eviscerated. The prospect of the Lord’s return in glory, the anticipation of the wrap-up of the universe as we know it, the confidence that there will be a final and irrevocable division between the just and the unjust – these have become merely creedal points for us, instead of ultimate realities that even now are life-transforming. (p. 46)

Forgiveness is possible only because there has been a real offence, and a real sacrifice to offset that offence. (p. 48)

If we refuse to acknowledge that we deserve retribution, refuse to accept the forgiveness available because, out of God’s indescribable love, Jesus suffered retribution in order to reconcile sinners like us to God, then we must face that retribution ourselves. (p. 49)

IF we do not aim for the new heaven and the new earth, many of our values and decisions in this world will be myopic, unworthy, tarnished, fundamentally wrong-headed. To put the matter bluntly: can biblical spirituality long survive where Christians are not oriented to the world to come? And, in this context, can we expect to pray aright unless we are oriented to the world to come? (p. 50)

Chapter 3: Worthy Petitions (2 Thessalonians 1:1-12)

Outline

1. Paul’s Petitions

- Paul prays that God might count these Christians worthy of their calling.

- Paul prays that God by his power might bring to fruition each Christian’s good, faith-prompted purposes.

2. The Goal of Paul’s Prayer

- Paul seeks the glorification of the Lord Jesus.

- Paul seeks the glorification of believers.

3. The Ground for Paul’s Prayer

In Paul’s writings, the call or calling of God is always effective: those who are called by God are truly saved. (p. 52)

Helpful Quotes

Paul prays that God himself might count them worthy of his calling. That means these believers must grow in all things that please God so that he is pleased with them, and finally judges them to be living up to the calling that they have received. (p. 53)

In a strange paradox Paul is constantly telling people, in effect, to become what they are; that is, since we already are children of God because of his free grace to us in Christ, we must now become all that such children should be. (p. 54)

If the holy God is count us “worthy of his calling,” we must ask him for help. (p. 54)

Assuming that Christians will develop such wholesome and spiritually minded purposes, Paul now prays that God himself may take these purposes and so work them out as to bring them to fruition, to fulfilment. (p. 56)

The ultimate end is that the Lord Jesus be glorified in consequence of such growing maturity and fruitfulness on the part of believers. (p. 57)

Lying at the heart of all sin is the desire to be the centre, to be like God. (p. 58)

When we glorify God, we are not giving him something substantial that he would not otherwise have. We are simply ascribing to him what is his. But when we are glorified, we are being made more like him, we are being strengthened or empowered to exhibit characteristics that we would not otherwise display. (p. 59)

We Christians must constantly be reminded of the fact that just as we were saved by grace, so also we are sanctified and glorified by grace. (p. 60)

At the heart of all our praying must be a biblical vision. That vision embraces who God is, what he has done, who we are, where we are going, what we must value and cherish. That vision drives us toward increasing conformity with Jesus, toward lives lived in the light of eternity, toward echoing the church’s ongoing cry, “Even so, come, Lord Jesus”. That vision must shape our prayers, so that the things that most concern us in prayer are those that concern the heart of God. (p. 62)

Chapter 4: Praying for others

Helpful Quotes

Mature Christian preachers will not construct sermons whose primary purpose is to gain renown for their erudition, humour, oratorical skill, or exegetical finesse. They will construct sermons that are designed to help people – to nurture them, instruct them, admonish them, rebuke them, encourage them, challenge them. (p. 64)

Our allegiance to God and his gospel will be demonstrated in our service to his people, to those who will become his people, to those made in his image. (p. 65)

If we joyfully confess the lordship of Christ, then when we ask what is best for people our answers will be cast in terms of what he thinks is best for people, not necessarily what people think is best for themselves. (p. 66)

After we have worked through Paul’s prayers and observed how often he prays for others, we need to work through them again to find out exactly what it is he asks God for on their behalf, and compare the results with what we normally ask for. (p. 75)

If you are serious about reforming your prayer life, you must begin with your heart. Unconfessed sin, nurtured sin, will always be a barrier between God and those he has made in his image. (p. 76)

Chapter 5: A Passion for People (1 Thessalonians 3:9-13)

Outline

Paul’s Prayer: A Product of Passion for People (2:17-3:8)

1. Paul’s prayer arises out of his intense longing to be with the Thessalonians.

2. Paul’s prayer arises out of passionate affection that seeks the good of others – not their praise, gratitude, acceptance, and still less some sense of professional self-fulfilment.

3. Paul’s prayer springs from unaffected delight at reports of the Thessalonians’ faith, love, perseverance, and strength.

Paul’s Prayer: A Continuing Passion for People (3:9-13)

1. Paul prays with rich thankfulness for the people of God (3:9).

- Although the thanksgiving is not addressed to the Thessalonians, but rather to God for the Thessalonians, nevertheless it is cast in such a way as to encourage them.

- Paul’s thanks to God for the Thessalonian Christians is in some measure Paul’s thanks to God for his own greatest sources of joy.

2. Paul prays that he might be able to strengthen these believers (3:10-11).

3. Paul prays that there might be an overflow of love among these believers (3:12).

4. Paul prays that these believers will be so strengthened in heart that they will be blameless and holy when the end comes (3:13).

Helpful Quotes

How shall the Christian service to which God calls me be enhanced by my daily death, by my principled commitment to take up my cross daily and die? (p. 83)

Christ Jesus came to us, choosing to be with us – and this is for our good. He chose the path of self-denial, dying in excruciating shame and degradation so that others might live. He calls us to serve the same way, not by lording it over others but by open-eyed death to self-interest, for the good of others. (p. 84)

If we are to improve our praying, we must strengthen our loving. As we grow in disciplined, self-sacrificing love, so we will grow in intercessory prayer. Superficially fervent prayers devoid of such love are finally phony, hollow, shallow. (p. 85)

How much would our churches be transformed if each of us made it a practice to thank God for others and then to tell these others what it is about them that we thank God for? (p. 87)

We need a prayer life that thanks God for the people of God, and then tells the people of God what we thank God for. (p. 88)

Two lessons to learn: the importance of frequent, regular prayer times, and the importance of remembering the right things when we set out to pray. (p. 90)

Christian love, mature, deep, and unqualified, is a rare commodity. When it is displayed, it speaks volumes to a society that gorges itself in self-interest, lust, mutual-admiration pacts, even while it knows very little of love. (p. 92)

When we pray for people, we must do so knowing that these people, and we ourselves, are inevitably moving toward the last day. When we pray with eternity’s values in view, we are driven to pray for people, because people like you and me are the ones who must give account to God on the last day. From that perspective, there is no prayer we can pray for others more fundamental than this: that God might strengthen their hearts so that they will be blameless and holy in the presence of our God and Father on the last day. (p. 94)

Chapter 6: The Content of a Challenging Prayer (Colossians 1:9-14)

Outline

Lessons from the Setting of the Prayer

1. Paul prays for Christians he has never met personally.

2. Paul prays unceasingly.

3. Paul links prayers of thanksgiving to prayers of petition.

Lessons from the Content of the Prayer

1. Paul asks God to fill believers with the knowledge of His Will.

2. The purpose of Paul’s petition is that believers might be utterly pleasing to the Lord Jesus.

3. Paul sketches, in terms of four characteristics, what a life pleasing to the Lord looks like (1:10b-14).

- Christians bear fruit in every good work.

- Christians grow in the knowledge of God.

- Christians are strengthened so as to display great endurance and patience.

- Christians joyfully give thanks to God the Father.

Helpful Quotes

Our prayers may be an index of how small and self-centred our world is. (p. 98)

There are certain things Christians need again and again, constantly, if they are to live and serve as Christians. (p. 99)

When Paul learns of the work of God in some church, he gives thanks; then he prays for still more of the same, shaped, perhaps, by his knowledge of the special needs and propensities of this particular body of believers. (p. 100)

Basic Bible knowledge does not ensure the kind of knowledge of God’s will that Paul has in mind. But ignorance of the Bible, the focal place where God has so generously disclosed his will, pretty well ensures that we will not be filled with this knowledge of God’s will, this knowledge that consists in all spiritual wisdom and understanding. (p. 104)

In Paul’s world, to be a Christian, to confess Jesus as Lord, meant to adopt a world view in which you are bound to please him in every way. Not to do so would be to bring shame on him whom you have confessed as Lord. (p. 106)

In thought, word, and deed, in action and in reaction, I must be asking myself, “What would Jesus have me do? What is speech or conduct worthy of him? What sort of speech or conduct in this context should I avoid, simply because it would shame him? What would please him the most?” (p. 106)

If we have been transferred out of the dominion of darkness and into the kingdom of the Son beloved by God, our only appropriate response is joyful gratitude. (p. 109)

Chapter 7: Excuses for Not Praying

Outline

1. I am too busy to pray

2. I feel too dry spiritually to pray

3. I feel no need to pray

4. I am too bitter to pray

5. I am too ashamed to pray

6. I am content with mediocrity

Helpful Quotes

It matters little whether you are the mother of active children who drain away your energy, an important executive in a major multinational corporation, a graduate student cramming for impending comprehensives, a plumber working overtime to put your children through college, or a pastor of a large church putting in ninety-hour weeks: at the end of the day, if you are too busy to pray, you are too busy. Cut something out. (p. 114)

God insists that we learn not to hide behind our feelings of dryness, behind our chronic unbelief, behind our lapses into discouragement. He wants us to learn to trust him, to learn to persevere in prayer. In prayer, as in other areas of life, God wants us to trust and obey. (p. 117)

When God finds us so puffed up that we do not feel our need for him, it is an act of kindness on his part to take us down a peg or two; it would be an act of judgment to leave us in our vaulting self-esteem. (p. 117)

It is painfully easy for us to come to all kinds of critical points in ministry, service, family development, changes in vocation, and, precisely because we have enjoyed spiritual victories in the past, approach these matters with sophisticated criteria but without prayer. (p. 118)

Many of us do not want to pray because we know that disciplined, biblical prayer would force us to eliminate sin that we rather cherish. It is very hard to pray with compassion and zeal for someone we much prefer to resent. (p. 119)

In the light of the matchless forgiveness we have received because Christ bore our guilt, what conceivable right do we have to withhold forgiveness? (p. 120)

Some Christians want enough of Christ to be identified with him but not enough to be seriously inconvenienced; they genuinely cling to basic Christian orthodoxy but do not want to engage in serious Bible study; they value moral probity, especially of the public sort, but do not engage in war against inner corruptions; they fret over the quality of the preacher’s sermon but do not worry much over the quality of their own prayer life. Such Christians are content with mediocrity. (p. 121)

Chapter 8: Overcoming the Hurdles (Philippians 1:9-11)

Outline

1. Paul Prays for what is Excellent

2. Paul’s Prayer is tied to the Long View

3. Paul’s Prayer is not Idolatrous, but Praises God

Helpful Quotes

The Christian love for which Paul prays is regulated by knowledge of the gospel and comprehensive moral insight. These constraints do not stifle love. For from it: they ensure its purity and value. Such love, Paul insists, must abound more and more. Christians must abound more and more in this love if they are to test and approve what is best. (p. 126)

There are countless decisions in life where it is not a question of making a straightforward decision between right and wrong. What you need is the extraordinary discernment that helps you perceive how things differ, and then make the best possible choice. (p. 127)

These excellent things are nothing less than all the elements characteristic of maturing Christian discipleship, and we cannot discern and approve them unless our love abounds more and more in knowledge and depth of insight. (p. 128)

Paul is passionate about pursuing spiritual excellence, and as he pursues it himself (3:10-14) so he prays for it for others (1:9-11). (p. 131)

Paul prays that the love of these Christians might abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that they will be able to discern and approve what is truly excellent – and all of this so that they may be pure and blameless and filled with the fruit of righteousness, with a view to the day of Christ. (p. 135)

We are still contaminated by failures, sin, relapses, rebellion, self-centredness; we are not yet what we ought to be. But by the grace of God, we are not what we were. For as long as we are left here, we are to struggle against sin, and anticipate, so far as we are able, what it will be like to live in the untarnished bliss of perfect righteousness. (p. 135-136)

Broughton Knox told his students, “God is not interested in one hundred percentism”. (p. 138)

In our pursuit of excellence, we must never worship excellence. That would simply be idolatrous. (p. 139)

If our pursuit of what is excellent, both in our prayer and in our Christian lives more generally, is bound up with our own egos and with unarticulated notions of self-fulfilment, it is worthless. (p. 140)

A practical test as to whether the excellence I pursue is really for the glory and praise of God or for my own self-image: If the things I value are taken away, is my joy in the Lord undiminished? Or am I so tied to my dreams that the destruction of my dreams means I am destroyed as well? (p. 141-142)

Chapter 9: A Sovereign and Personal God

Outline

1. God’s Sovereignty and Human Responsibility

2. Mystery and the Nature of God

Helpful Quotes

The Bible insists that we pray, urges us to pray, gives us examples of prayer. Something has gone wrong in our reasoning if our reasoning leads us away from prayer; something is amiss in our theology if our theology becomes a disincentive to pray. Yet sometimes that is what happens. (p. 147)

Two truths, both of which are demonstrably taught or exemplified again and again in the Bible: 1. God is absolutely sovereign, but his sovereignty never functions in Scripture to reduce human responsibility. 2. Human beings are responsible creatures – that is, they choose, they believe, they disobey, they respond, and there is moral significance in their choices; but human responsibility never functions in Scripture to diminish God’s sovereignty or to make God absolutely contingent. (p. 148)

Both truths come together in many passages [Genesis 50:19-20; 2 Samuel 24; Isaiah 10:5-19; John 6:37-40; Philippians 2:12-13; Acts 18:9-10; Acts 4:23-30]. (p. 150)

If human beings are not held responsible for this acts [the cross], why should they be held responsible for any act? And if they are not held responsible, then why should God have sent his Anointed One to die in their place? (p. 156)

We [must] refuse to think of these two statements as embracing a deep contradiction. (p. 156)

It is vital to see that God does not stand behind good and evil in exactly the same way. (p. 158)

God stands behind good in such a way that the good can ultimately be credited to him; he stands behind evil in such a way that what is evil is inevitably credited to secondary agents and all their malignant effects. (p. 158)

The wonderful truth is that God is both transcendent and personal. He is transcendent: he exists above or beyond time and space, since he existed before the universe was created. From this exalted and scarcely imaginable reach he sovereignly rules over the works of his hands. Yet he is personal: he presents himself to us not as a raw power or irresistible force, but as Father, as Lord. When he speaks and issues a command, if I obey I am obeying him; if I disobey, I am disobeying him. All of my meaningful relationships with God are bound up with the fact that God has disclosed himself to be a person. (p. 159)

God expects to be pleaded with; he expects godly believers to intercede with him. (p. 164)

The really wonderful truth is that human beings like you and me can participate in bringing about God’s purposes through God’s own appointed means. In that limited sense, prayer does certainly change things; it cannot be thought to change things in some absolute way that catches God out. (p. 164)

Chapter 10: Praying to the Sovereign God (Ephesians 1:15-23)

Outline

1. Because God is sovereign, Paul offers thanksgiving for God’s intervening, sovereign grace in the lives of his readers (1:15-16)

2. Because God is sovereign, Paul offers intercession that God’s sovereign, holy purpose in the salvation of his people may be accomplished (1:17-19a)

- Paul’s prayer is that the Ephesians might know God better.

- Paul’s prayer to God is that we might have the insight needed to grasp certain crucial truths.

3. Because God is sovereign, Paul offers a review of God’s most dramatic displays of power (1:19b-23)

- Paul mentions the power exerted when Christ was raised from death.

- Paul describes the power displayed in the exalted Christ.

- Paul declares the power exercised by Christ over everything – for the church.

Helpful Quotes

In a spirit of profound worship, Paul has been outlining God’s sovereignty, especially in redemption, as the anchor for his grace and as the source of the blessings enjoyed by his people. As he thinks about these things, Paul finds specific things to pray for. (p. 169-170)

Paul’s prayer in Ephesians 1 is a model of how to pray under the sovereignty of God. (p. 170)

Because it is God who has worked in them, Paul has not stopped thanking God; because it is God alone who sovereignly and graciously continues to effect such transformation, he is the one who must be petitioned to continue his good work. (p. 170)

In the same way that we give thanks to God when we recognise his quiet and effective work in our lives, so also we thank God when we hear of his work in others. (p. 171)

Paul prays that God might give his readers the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that they might know him better. What kind of God will answer such a prayer? It is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, for all of God’s blessings have been won for us through Christ’s work. More: we are related to God through Christ…Moreover, unless God whose domain is glory graciously reveals to us more of his glory, how shall we press on to know him better and thus prepare for the day when we too enter his glory? (p. 174)

As he asks God to reveal himself by his Spirit, so he asks God that the eyes of his readers’ hearts might be enlightened, so that his readers might learn certain things. (p. 175)

His prayer to God is that we might know him better and might have the insight to grasp certain crucial truths – the hope of our calling, the riches of God’s glorious inheritance in the saints, and his incomparably great power for us who believe. (p. 177)

Because God views me as “in Christ,” and Christ is seated with his Father in the heavenlies, therefore God views me as there in principle. (p. 179)

Chapter 11: Praying for Power (Ephesians 3:14-21)

Outline

1. Two Central Petitions

- Paul prays that God might strengthen us with power through his Spirit in our inner being (3:16-17a).

- Paul prays that we might have power to grasp the limitless dimensions of the love of Christ (3:17b-19).

2. Two Grounds for Paul’s Petitions

- Paul’s petitions are in line with God’s purposes.

- Paul’s petitions are addressed to the heavenly Father.

3. A Final Word of Praise

- The God whom he petitions is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine.

- The ultimate purpose of Paul’s prayer is that there be glory to God, in the church and in Christ Jesus.

Helpful Quotes

Christians learn to pray by listening to those around them. (p. 182)

If every part of our lives is to be renewed and reformed by the Word of God, how much more should that be so of our praying? If our generation does not cast up many prayer warriors whose habits in prayer accurately reflect the standards of Scripture, it is all the more urgent that we return to the primary source. (p. 182)

Paul’s primary concern is to pray for a display of God’s mighty power in the domain of our being that controls our character and prepares us for heaven. (p. 185)

Paul’s hope is that Christ will truly take up his residence in the hearts of believers, as they trust him, so as to make their hearts his home. (p. 186)

A plea for power – power to be holy, power to think, act, and talk in ways utterly pleasing to Christ, power to strengthen moral resolve, power to walk in transparent gratitude to God, power to be humble, power to be discerning, power to be obedient and trusting, power to grow in conformity to Jesus Christ. (p. 189)

This is not a prayer that we might love Christ more (though that is a good thing to pray for); rather, it is a prayer that we might better grasp his love for us. (p. 191)

Paul assumes that we cannot be as spiritually mature as we ought to be unless we receive power from God to enable us to grasp the limitless dimensions of the love of Christ. (p. 195)

Part of our deep “me-ism” is manifested in such independence that we do not really want to get so close to God that we feel dependent upon him, swamped by his love. (p. 197)

It is a wonderful comfort, a marvellous boost to faith, to know that you are praying in line with the declared will of almighty God. (p. 200)

Paul dares to approach God with these requests because he knows God to be a good God, a heavenly Father. Thus the nature and character of God become for Paul a fundamental ground for intercessory prayer. (p. 201)

Has God become so central to all our thought and pursuits, and thus to our praying, that we cannot easily imagine asking for anything without consciously longing that the answer bring glory to God? (p. 203)

Chapter 12: Prayer for Ministry (Romans 15:14-33)

Outline

1. Paul wants this prayer to be offered with earnestness, urgency and persistence.

2. Paul solicits prayer for himself, in connection with his own ministry.

- Paul asks for prayer that he might be rescued from unbelievers in Judea.

- Paul asks for prayer that his service in Jerusalem might be acceptable to the saints there.

- We should pray that Christian leaders might be rescued from the opposition of outsiders who try to destroy their ministry.

- We should pray that Christian leaders might find that their Christian service is acceptable to those to whom they minister.

3. For Paul, prayer for his ministry envisions further ministry.

4. Finally, it is important to learn that some of Paul’s prayers were not answered as he would have liked.

Helpful Quotes

A little mystery, a little inconsistency, leaves room for a sovereign and transcendent God. (p. 205)

One of the reasons why elderly people appreciate the psalms more than young people is because they have lived longer and experienced more, and therefore they can resonate with the wide range on experiences reflected there. (p. 208)

If you belong to Jesus Christ and have experienced the powerful love of the Spirit operating through you, then surely toward an apostle of Jesus Christ you will gladly display that love by praying for him. (p. 210)

Paul saw prayer as part of the Christian’s struggle. (p. 210)

Samuel Zwemer, ground-breaking missionary to Muslim lands, could utter his famous saying, “Prayer is the gymnasium of the soul”. (p. 210)

Paul understands real praying to include an element of struggle, discipline, work, spiritual agonising against the dark powers of evil. (p. 211)

Many in this generation attend church to find peace and happiness, not pardon and holiness. They want to be fulfilled, not to discover how Christ is the fulfilment of earlier revelation. They prefer entertainment to worship, oratory to truth, and programs to piety. (p. 218)

We need to pray that God will send us undershepherds who are wise, spiritual, godly, disciplined, informed, prayerful, faithful to Scripture. But we also need to pray that their ministry will be acceptable to the saints. (p. 218)

Paul is a man who dreams dreams, who envisages new needs and opportunities, and these are carefully tied to his own prayer life and to the prayers he solicits from others. (p. 220)

We do well to remember the frequently quoted words of E. M. Bounds: “One of the constitutional enforcements of the gospel is prayer. Without prayer, the gospel can neither be preached effectively, promulgated faithfully, experienced in the heart, nor practiced in the life. And for the very simple reason that by leaving prayer out of the catalogue of religious duties, we leave God out, and His work cannot progress without Him.” (p. 221)

God may give us what we ask for; he may make us wait; he may decline. He may give us the goal of what we ask for, but by quite another means, as when he provided Paul with more grace to cope with the suffering inflicted by the thorn in the flesh, rather than removing the thorn. (p. 223)

Part of this business of prayer is getting to know God better, part of it is learning his mind and will; part of it is tied up with teaching me to wait, or teaching me that my requests are often skewed or my motives selfish. (p. 224)

[God’s] answers to our prayers will always be for his glory and his people’s good. (p. 224)

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